2892 PART 12 Endocrinology and Metabolism
contiguous to vascular and neurologic structures, including the cavernous sinuses, cranial nerves, and optic chiasm. Thus, expanding intrasellar pathologic processes may have significant central mass effects in
addition to their endocrinologic impact.
Hypothalamic neural cells synthesize specific releasing and inhibiting
hormones that are secreted directly into the portal vessels of the pituitary
stalk. Blood supply of the pituitary gland comes from the superior and
inferior hypophyseal arteries (Fig. 378-2). The hypothalamic-pituitary
portal plexus provides the major blood source for the anterior pituitary,
allowing reliable transmission of hypothalamic peptide pulses without
significant systemic dilution; consequently, anterior pituitary cells are
exposed to specific releasing or inhibiting factors and in turn release
their respective hormones as discrete pulses into the systemic circulation (Fig. 378-3).
The posterior pituitary is supplied by the inferior hypophyseal arteries. In contrast to the anterior pituitary, the posterior lobe is directly
innervated by hypothalamic neurons (supraopticohypophyseal and
tuberohypophyseal nerve tracts) via the pituitary stalk (Chap. 381).
Thus, posterior pituitary production of vasopressin (antidiuretic hormone [ADH]) and oxytocin is particularly sensitive to neuronal damage by lesions that affect the pituitary stalk or hypothalamus.
■ PITUITARY DEVELOPMENT
The embryonic differentiation and maturation of anterior pituitary cells
have been elucidated in considerable detail. Pituitary development from
Rathke’s pouch involves a complex interplay of lineage-specific transcription factors expressed in pluripotent Sox2-expressing precursor
cells and gradients of locally produced growth factors (Table 378-1).
The transcription factor Prop-1 induces pituitary development of Pit-1-
specific lineages as well as gonadotropes. The transcription factor Pit-1
determines cell-specific expression of GH, PRL, and TSH in somatotropes, lactotropes, and thyrotropes. Expression of high levels of estrogen receptors in cells that contain Pit-1 favors PRL expression, whereas
thyrotrope embryonic factor (TEF) induces TSH expression. Pit-1
binds to GH, PRL, and TSH gene regulatory elements, providing a
mechanism for determining specific pituitary hormone phenotypic stability. Gonadotrope cell development is further defined by the cell-specific expression of the nuclear receptors steroidogenic factor (SF-1)
and dosage-sensitive sex reversal, adrenal hypoplasia critical region,
on chromosome X, gene 1 (DAX-1). Development of corticotrope
cells, which express the proopiomelanocortin (POMC) gene, requires
the T-Pit transcription factor. Abnormalities of pituitary development
can be caused by inherited mutations of developmental transcription
TABLE 378-1 Anterior Pituitary Hormone Expression and Regulation
CELL CORTICOTROPE SOMATOTROPE LACTOTROPE THYROTROPE GONADOTROPE
Tissue-specific
transcription factor
T-Pit Prop-1, Pit-1 Prop-1, Pit-1 Prop-1, Pit-1, TEF SF-1, DAX-1
Fetal appearance 6 weeks 8 weeks 12 weeks 12 weeks 12 weeks
Hormone POMC GH PRL TSH FSH, LH
Protein Polypeptide Polypeptide Polypeptide Glycoprotein α, β
subunits
Glycoprotein α, β
subunits
Amino acids 266 (ACTH 1–39) 191 198 211 210, 204
Stimulators CRH, AVP, gp-130
cytokines
GHRH, ghrelin Estrogen, TRH, VIP TRH GnRH, activins, estrogen
Inhibitors Glucocorticoids Somatostatin, IGF-1 Dopamine T3
, T4
, dopamine,
somatostatin,
glucocorticoids
Sex steroids, inhibin
Target gland Adrenal Liver, bone, other tissues Breast, other tissues Thyroid Ovary, testis
Trophic effect Steroid production IGF-1 production,
growth induction, insulin
antagonism
Milk production T4
synthesis and secretion Sex steroid production,
follicle growth, germ cell
maturation
Normal range ACTH, 4–22 pg/L <0.5 μg/La M <15 μg/L; F <20 μg/L 0.1–5 mU/L M, 5–20 IU/L; F (basal),
5–20 IU/L
a
Hormone secretion integrated over 24 h.
Abbreviations: F, female; M, male. For other abbreviations, see text.
Source: Adapted with permission from Melmed S: Hypothalmic-pituitary regulation, in P Conn (ed): Conn’s Translational Neuroscience. San Diego, CA: Elsevier; 2017.
factors including Pit-1, Prop-1, SF-1, DAX-1, and T-Pit, resulting in
selective or combined pituitary hormone deficit syndromes.
ANTERIOR PITUITARY HORMONES
Each anterior pituitary hormone is under unique control, and
each exhibits highly specific normal and dysregulated secretory
characteristics.
■ PROLACTIN
Synthesis PRL consists of 198 amino acids and has a molecular
mass of 21,500 kDa; it is weakly homologous to GH and human placental lactogen (hPL), reflecting the duplication and divergence of a
common GH-PRL-hPL precursor gene. PRL is synthesized in lactotropes, which constitute ~20% of anterior pituitary cells. Lactotropes
and somatotropes are derived from a common precursor cell that may
give rise to a tumor that secretes both PRL and GH. Marked lactotrope
cell hyperplasia develops during pregnancy and the first few months of
lactation. These transient functional changes in the lactotrope population are induced by estrogen to increase PRL production.
Secretion Normal adult serum PRL levels are about 10–25 μg/L
in women and 10–20 μg/L in men. PRL secretion is pulsatile, with
the highest secretory peaks occurring during non–rapid eye movement (non-REM) sleep. Peak serum PRL levels (up to 30 μg/L) occur
between 4:00 and 6:00 a.m. The circulating half-life of PRL is ~50 min.
PRL is unique among the pituitary hormones in that the predominant hypothalamic control mechanism is inhibitory, reflecting tonic
dopamine-mediated suppression of PRL release. This regulatory pathway accounts for the spontaneous PRL hypersecretion that occurs with
pituitary stalk section, often a consequence of head trauma or compressive mass lesions at the skull base. Pituitary dopamine type 2 (D2
)
receptors mediate inhibition of PRL synthesis and secretion. Targeted
disruption (gene knockout) of the murine D2
receptor in mice results in
hyperprolactinemia and lactotrope proliferation. As discussed below,
dopamine agonists play a central role in the management of hyperprolactinemic disorders.
Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) (pyro Glu-His-Pro-NH2
) is a
hypothalamic tripeptide that elicits PRL release within 15–30 min after
intravenous injection. TRH primarily regulates TSH, and the physiologic relevance of TRH for PRL regulation is unclear (Chap. 382).
Serum PRL levels rise transiently after exercise, meals, sexual
intercourse, minor surgical procedures, general anesthesia, chest wall
injury, acute myocardial infarction, and other forms of acute stress.
2893Physiology of Anterior Pituitary Hormones CHAPTER 378
Hypothalamus
Pituitary
Cortisol
ACTH
PRL
IGF-1
Target
organs
+
+
+
+
+ +
+
+
–
–
– – – +
Adrenal
glands
Lactation
Liver
Chondrocytes
Linear and
organ growth
Thyroid
glands
Testes
Ovaries
Cell homeostasis
and function
T4/T3
Thermogenesis
metabolism
Testosterone
Inhibin
Spermatogenesis
Secondary sex
characteristics
Estradiol
Progesterone
Inhibin
Ovulation
Secondary sex
characteristics
GnRH
TRH
CRH
SRIF
+
TSH
LH
FSH
Dopamine
GHRH
GH
FIGURE 378-1 Diagram of pituitary axes. Hypothalamic hormones regulate
anterior pituitary trophic hormones that in turn determine target gland secretion.
Peripheral hormones feed back to regulate hypothalamic and pituitary hormones.
For abbreviations, see text.
LH mlU/mL GnRH pg/mL
GnRH pulses
LH pulses
FIGURE 378-3 Hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) pulses
induce secretory pulses of luteinizing hormone (LH).
Neuroendocrine
cell nuclei
Third ventricle
Hypothalamus
Stalk
Superior
hypophyseal
artery
Long portal
vessels
Trophic
hormone
secreting
cells
Short portal
vessel
Inferior
hypophyseal
artery
Anterior
pituitary
Hormone
secretion
Posterior
pituitary
FIGURE 378-2 Diagram of hypothalamic-pituitary vasculature. The hypothalamic
nuclei produce hormones that traverse the portal system and impinge on anterior
pituitary cells to regulate pituitary hormone secretion. Posterior pituitary hormones
are derived from direct neural extensions.
PRL levels increase markedly (about tenfold) during pregnancy and
decline rapidly within 2 weeks of parturition. If breast-feeding is initiated, basal PRL levels remain elevated; suckling stimulates transient
reflex increases in PRL levels that last for ~30–45 min. Breast suckling
activates afferent neural pathways in the hypothalamus that induce
PRL release. With time, suckling-induced responses diminish and
interfeeding PRL levels return to normal.
Action The PRL receptor is a member of the type I cytokine receptor family that also includes GH and interleukin (IL) 6 receptors. Ligand binding induces receptor dimerization and intracellular signaling
by Janus kinase (JAK), which stimulates translocation of the signal
transduction and activators of transcription (STAT) family to activate
target genes. Mutations of the PRL receptor result in PRL insensitivity,
hyperprolactinemia, and oligomenorrhea. When homozygous, PRL
receptor mutations cause agalactia, demonstrating that PRL action
is necessary for lactation. In the breast, the lobuloalveolar epithelium proliferates in response to PRL, placental lactogens, estrogen,
progesterone, and local paracrine growth factors, including insulin-like
growth factor 1 (IGF-1).
PRL acts to induce and maintain lactation and to suppress both
reproductive function and sexual drive. These functions are geared
toward ensuring that maternal lactation is sustained and not interrupted by pregnancy. PRL inhibits reproductive function by suppressing hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and
pituitary gonadotropin secretion and by impairing gonadal steroidogenesis in both women and men. In the ovary, PRL blocks folliculogenesis and inhibits granulosa cell aromatase activity, leading to
hypoestrogenism and anovulation. PRL also has a luteolytic effect, generating a shortened, or inadequate, luteal phase of the menstrual cycle.
In men, attenuated LH secretion leads to low testosterone levels and
decreased spermatogenesis. These hormonal changes decrease libido
and reduce fertility in patients with hyperprolactinemia.
■ GROWTH HORMONE
Synthesis GH is the most abundant anterior pituitary hormone,
and GH-secreting somatotrope cells constitute up to 50% of the total
2894 PART 12 Endocrinology and Metabolism
anterior pituitary cell population. Mammosomatotrope cells, which
coexpress PRL with GH, can be identified by using double immunostaining techniques. Somatotrope development and GH transcription
are determined by expression of the cell-specific Pit-1 nuclear transcription factor. Five distinct genes encode GH and related proteins.
The pituitary GH gene (hGH-N) produces two alternatively spliced
products that give rise to 22-kDa GH (191 amino acids) and a less
abundant 20-kDa GH molecule with similar biologic activity. Placental syncytiotrophoblast cells express a GH variant (hGH-V) gene; the
related hormone human chorionic somatotropin (HCS) is expressed by
distinct members of the gene cluster.
Secretion GH secretion is controlled by complex hypothalamic and
peripheral factors. GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) is a 44-amino-acid
hypothalamic peptide that stimulates GH synthesis and release. Ghrelin, an octanoylated gastric-derived peptide, and synthetic agonists
of the GHS-R induce GHRH and also directly stimulate GH release.
Somatostatin (somatotropin-release inhibiting factor [SRIF]) is synthesized in the medial preoptic area of the hypothalamus and inhibits GH
secretion. GHRH is secreted in discrete spikes that elicit GH pulses,
whereas SRIF sets basal GH secretory tone. SRIF also is expressed in
many extrahypothalamic tissues, including the central nervous system
(CNS), gastrointestinal tract, and pancreas, where it also acts to inhibit
islet hormone secretion. IGF-1, the peripheral target hormone for
GH, feeds back to inhibit GH; estrogen induces GH, whereas chronic
glucocorticoid excess suppresses GH release, leading to growth delay
in children.
Surface receptors on the somatotrope regulate GH synthesis and
secretion. The GHRH receptor is a G protein–coupled receptor
(GPCR) that signals through the intracellular cyclic AMP pathway
to stimulate somatotrope cell proliferation as well as GH production.
Inactivating mutations of the GHRH receptor cause profound dwarfism. A distinct surface receptor for ghrelin, the gastric-derived GH
secretagogue, is expressed in both the hypothalamus and pituitary.
Somatostatin binds to five distinct receptor subtypes (SST1 to SST5);
SST2 and SST5 subtypes preferentially suppress GH (and TSH) secretion, while SST5 predominantly signals to suppress ACTH secretion.
GH secretion is pulsatile, with highest peak levels occurring at
night, generally correlating with sleep onset. GH secretory rates decline
markedly with age so that hormone levels in middle age are ~15% of
pubertal levels. These changes are paralleled by an age-related decline
in lean muscle mass. GH secretion is also reduced in obese individuals,
although IGF-1 levels may not be suppressed, suggesting a change in
the setpoint for feedback control. Elevated GH levels occur within an
hour of deep sleep onset as well as after exercise, physical stress, and
trauma and during sepsis. Integrated 24-h GH secretion is higher in
women and is also enhanced by estrogen replacement, likely reflective
of increased peripheral GH resistance. Using standard assays, random
GH measurements are undetectable in ~50% of daytime samples
obtained from healthy subjects and are also undetectable (<1 μg/L) in
most obese and elderly subjects. Thus, single random GH measurements do not distinguish patients with adult GH deficiency from those
with GH levels in the normal range.
GH secretion is profoundly influenced by nutritional factors. Using
ultrasensitive GH assays with a sensitivity of 0.002 μg/L, a glucose
load suppresses GH to <0.7 μg/L in women and to <0.07 μg/L in men.
Increased GH pulse frequency and peak amplitudes occur with chronic
malnutrition or prolonged fasting. GH is stimulated by oral ghrelin
receptor agonists, intravenous l-arginine, dopamine, and apomorphine
(a dopamine receptor agonist), as well as by α-adrenergic pathways.
β-Adrenergic blockade induces basal GH and enhances GHRH- and
insulin-evoked GH release.
Action The pattern of GH secretion may affect tissue responses.
The higher GH pulsatility observed in men compared with the relatively continuous basal GH secretion in women may be an important
biologic determinant of linear growth patterns and liver enzyme
induction.
The 70-kDa peripheral GH receptor protein has structural homology
with the cytokine/hematopoietic superfamily. A fragment of the receptor
extracellular domain generates a soluble GH binding protein (GHBP)
that binds to circulating GH. The liver and cartilage express the greatest
number of GH receptors. GH binding to preformed receptor dimers
is followed by internal rotation and subsequent signaling through
the JAK/STAT pathway. Activated STAT proteins translocate to the
nucleus, where they modulate expression of GH-regulated target genes.
GH analogues that bind to the receptor but are incapable of mediating
receptor signaling are potent antagonists of GH action. A GH receptor
antagonist (pegvisomant) is approved for treatment of acromegaly.
GH induces protein synthesis and nitrogen retention and also
impairs glucose tolerance by antagonizing insulin action. GH also
stimulates lipolysis, leading to increased circulating fatty acid levels,
reduced omental fat mass, and enhanced lean body mass. GH promotes
sodium, potassium, and water retention and elevates serum levels of
inorganic phosphate. Linear bone growth occurs as a result of complex
hormonal and growth factor actions, including those of IGF-1. GH
stimulates epiphyseal prechondrocyte differentiation. These precursor
cells produce IGF-1 locally, and their proliferation is also responsive to
the growth factor.
Insulin-Like Growth Factors Although GH exerts direct effects
in target tissues, many of its physiologic effects are mediated indirectly
through IGF-1, a potent growth and differentiation factor. The liver
is the major source of circulating IGF-1. In peripheral tissues, IGF-1
also exerts local paracrine actions that appear to be both dependent on
and independent of GH. Thus, GH administration induces circulating
IGF-1 as well as stimulating local IGF-1 production in multiple tissues.
Both IGF-1 and IGF-2 are bound to high-affinity circulating
IGF-binding proteins (IGFBPs) that regulate IGF availability and bioactivity. Levels of IGFBP3 are GH dependent, and it serves as the major
carrier protein for circulating IGF-1. GH deficiency and malnutrition
usually are associated with low IGFBP3 levels. IGFBP1 and IGFBP2
regulate local tissue IGF action but do not bind appreciable amounts
of circulating IGF-1.
Serum IGF-1 concentrations are profoundly affected by physiologic factors. Levels increase during puberty, peak at 16 years, and
subsequently decline by >80% during the aging process. IGF-1 concentrations are higher in women than in men. Because GH is the
major determinant of hepatic IGF-1 synthesis, abnormalities of GH
synthesis or action (including pituitary failure, GHRH receptor defect,
GH receptor defect, or pharmacologic GH receptor blockade) lead
to reduced IGF-1 levels. Hypocaloric states are associated with GH
resistance; IGF-1 levels are therefore low with cachexia, malnutrition,
and sepsis. In acromegaly, IGF-1 levels are invariably high and reflect a
log-linear relationship with circulating GH concentrations.
IGF-1 PHYSIOLOGY Injected IGF-1 (100 μg/kg) induces hypoglycemia, and lower doses improve insulin sensitivity in patients with severe
insulin resistance and diabetes. In cachectic subjects, IGF-1 infusion
(12 μg/kg per h) enhances nitrogen retention and lowers cholesterol
levels. Longer-term subcutaneous IGF-1 injections enhance protein
synthesis and are anabolic. Although bone formation markers are
induced, bone turnover also may be stimulated by IGF-1. IGF-1 is
approved for use in patients with GH-resistance syndromes.
IGF-1 side effects are dose dependent, and overdose may result
in hypoglycemia, hypotension, fluid retention, temporomandibular
jaw pain, and increased intracranial pressure, all of which are reversible. Retinal damage and avascular femoral head necrosis have been
reported. Chronic excess IGF-1 administration presumably would
result in features of acromegaly.
■ ADRENOCORTICOTROPIC HORMONE
(See also Chap. 386)
Synthesis ACTH-secreting corticotrope cells constitute ~20% of the
pituitary cell population. ACTH (39 amino acids) is derived from the
POMC precursor protein (266 amino acids) that also generates several
2895Physiology of Anterior Pituitary Hormones CHAPTER 378
other peptides, including β-lipotropin, β-endorphin, met-enkephalin,
α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-MSH), and corticotropin-like
intermediate lobe protein (CLIP). The POMC gene is potently suppressed by glucocorticoids and induced by corticotropin-releasing
hormone (CRH), arginine vasopressin (AVP), and proinflammatory
cytokines, including IL-6, as well as leukemia inhibitory factor.
CRH, a 41-amino-acid hypothalamic peptide synthesized in the paraventricular nucleus as well as in higher brain centers, is the predominant stimulator of ACTH synthesis and release. The CRH receptor
is a GPCR that is expressed on the corticotrope and signals to induce
POMC transcription.
Secretion ACTH secretion is pulsatile and exhibits a characteristic
circadian rhythm, peaking at about 6:00 a.m. and reaching a nadir
about midnight. Adrenal glucocorticoid secretion, which is driven by
ACTH, follows a parallel diurnal pattern. ACTH circadian rhythmicity
is determined by variations in secretory pulse amplitude rather than
changes in pulse frequency. Superimposed on this endogenous rhythm,
ACTH levels are increased by physical and psychological stress, exercise, acute illness, and insulin-induced hypoglycemia.
Glucocorticoid-mediated negative regulation of the hypothalamicpituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis occurs as a consequence of both hypothalamic CRH suppression and direct attenuation of pituitary POMC gene
expression and ACTH release. In contrast, loss of cortisol feedback
inhibition, as occurs in primary adrenal failure, results in extremely
high ACTH levels.
Acute inflammatory or septic insults activate the HPA axis through
the integrated actions of proinflammatory cytokines, bacterial toxins,
and neural signals. The overlapping cascade of ACTH-inducing cytokines (tumor necrosis factor [TNF]; IL-1, -2, and -6; and leukemia inhibitory factor) activates hypothalamic CRH and AVP secretion, pituitary
POMC gene expression, and local pituitary paracrine cytokine networks.
The resulting cortisol elevation restrains the inflammatory response
and enables host protection. Concomitantly, cytokine-mediated central
glucocorticoid receptor resistance impairs glucocorticoid suppression
of the HPA. Thus, the neuroendocrine stress response reflects the net
result of highly integrated hypothalamic, intrapituitary, and peripheral
hormone and cytokine signals acting to regulate cortisol secretion.
Action The major function of the HPA axis is to maintain metabolic
homeostasis and mediate the neuroendocrine stress response. ACTH
induces adrenocortical steroidogenesis by sustaining adrenal cell proliferation and function. The receptor for ACTH, designated melanocortin-2 receptor, is a GPCR that induces steroidogenesis by stimulating a
cascade of steroidogenic enzymes (Chap. 386).
■ GONADOTROPINS: FSH AND LH
Synthesis and Secretion Gonadotrope cells constitute ~10% of
anterior pituitary cells and produce two gonadotropin hormones—LH
and FSH. Like TSH and human chorionic gonadotropin, LH and
FSH are glycoprotein hormones that comprise α and β subunits. The
α subunit is common to these glycoprotein hormones; specificity of
hormone function is conferred by the β subunits, which are expressed
by separate genes.
Gonadotropin synthesis and release are dynamically regulated. This
is particularly true in women, in whom rapidly fluctuating gonadal steroid levels vary throughout the menstrual cycle. Hypothalamic GnRH,
a 10-amino-acid peptide, regulates the synthesis and secretion of both
LH and FSH. Brain kisspeptin, a product of the KISS1 gene, regulates
hypothalamic GnRH release. GnRH is secreted in discrete pulses every
60–120 min, and the pulses in turn elicit LH and FSH pulses (Fig. 378-3).
The pulsatile mode of GnRH input is essential to its action; pulses
prime gonadotrope responsiveness, whereas continuous GnRH exposure induces desensitization. Based on this phenomenon, long-acting
GnRH agonists are used to suppress gonadotropin levels in children
with precocious puberty and in men with prostate cancer (Chap. 87)
and are used in some ovulation-induction protocols to reduce levels
of endogenous gonadotropins (Chap. 392). Estrogens act at both the
hypothalamus and the pituitary to modulate gonadotropin secretion.
Chronic estrogen exposure is inhibitory, whereas rising estrogen levels, as occur during the preovulatory surge, exert positive feedback to
increase gonadotropin pulse frequency and amplitude. Progesterone
slows GnRH pulse frequency but enhances gonadotropin responses
to GnRH. Testosterone feedback in men also occurs at the hypothalamic and pituitary levels and is mediated in part by its conversion to
estrogens.
Although GnRH is the main regulator of LH and FSH secretion,
FSH synthesis is also under distinct control by the gonadal peptides
inhibin and activin, members of the transforming growth factor β
(TGF-β) family. Inhibin selectively suppresses FSH, whereas activin
stimulates FSH synthesis (Chap. 392).
Action The gonadotropin hormones interact with their respective
GPCRs expressed in the ovary and testis, evoking germ cell development and maturation and steroid hormone biosynthesis. In women,
FSH regulates ovarian follicle development and stimulates ovarian
estrogen production. LH mediates ovulation and maintenance of the
corpus luteum. In men, LH induces Leydig cell testosterone synthesis
and secretion, and FSH stimulates seminiferous tubule development
and regulates spermatogenesis.
■ THYROID-STIMULATING HORMONE
Synthesis and Secretion TSH-secreting thyrotrope cells constitute 5% of the anterior pituitary cell population. TSH shares a common
α subunit with LH and FSH but contains a specific TSH β subunit.
TRH is a hypothalamic tripeptide (pyroglutamyl histidylprolinamide)
that acts through a pituitary GPCR to stimulate TSH synthesis and
secretion; it also stimulates the lactotrope cell to secrete PRL. TSH
secretion is stimulated by TRH, whereas thyroid hormones, dopamine,
somatostatin, and glucocorticoids suppress TSH by overriding TRH
induction.
Thyrotrope cell proliferation and TSH secretion are both induced
when negative feedback inhibition by thyroid hormones is removed.
Thus, thyroid damage (including surgical thyroidectomy), radiation-induced hypothyroidism, chronic thyroiditis, and prolonged
goitrogen exposure are associated with increased TSH levels.
Long-standing untreated hypothyroidism can lead to elevated TSH levels, which may be associated with thyrotrope hyperplasia and pituitary
enlargement and may sometimes be evident on magnetic resonance
imaging.
Action TSH is secreted in pulses, although the excursions are
modest in comparison to other pituitary hormones because of the low
amplitude of the pulses and the relatively long half-life of TSH. Consequently, single determinations of TSH suffice to precisely assess its
circulating levels. TSH binds to a GPCR on thyroid follicular cells to
stimulate thyroid hormone synthesis and release (Chap. 382).
■ FURTHER READING
Bernard V et al: Prolactin: A pleiotropic factor in health and disease.
Nat Rev Endocrinol 15:356, 2019.
Cheung LYM et al: Single-cell RNA sequencing reveals novel markers
of male pituitary stem cells and hormone-producing cell types. Endocrinology 159:3910, 2018.
Das N, Kumar TR: Molecular regulation of follicle-stimulating hormone synthesis, secretion and action. J Mol Endocrinol 60:R131,
2018.
Langlais D et al: Adult pituitary cell maintenance: Lineage-specific
contribution of self-duplication. Mol Endocrinol 27:1103, 2013.
Le Tissier P et al: The process of anterior pituitary hormone pulse
generation. Endocrinology 159:3524, 2018.
Murray PG et al: 60 years of neuroendocrinology: The hypothalamoGH axis: The past 60 years. J Endocrinol 226:T123, 2015.
Ranke MB, Wit JM: Growth hormone: Past, present and future.
Nat Rev Endocrinol 14:285, 2018.
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